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Sebastian Weber

Mashup Component Isolation via Server-Side Analysis and Instrumentation - 0 views

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    Web 2.0 and mashups provide opportunities for exciting new applications. However, the security model of the underlying browser technology is quite inadequate to deal withthe new trust and security issues.
Sebastian Weber

Subspace: Secure Cross-Domain Communication for Web Mashups - 0 views

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    Browsers are poorly designed to pass data between domains, often forcing web developers to abandon security in the name of functionality. To address this deficiency, we developed Subspace, a cross-domain communication mechanism.
Sebastian Weber

Web 2.0: A Pattern Library - 0 views

  • Iterative launches The best way to launch web products is to first release the smallest parts that will be useful and which can stand up as a "product." Then, follow this up by watching user behavior closely and letting your users steer the product toward the real demand while adding more features. Leave your product in "beta" for a year or more if you want.
  • The biggest problem with the old "big release" model is that it required design and development teams to go quite far down the road of development before seeing any real-world user action, which meant that the builders had to make many more predictions about how users would behave before seeing real user behavior.
  • Mashup-ability Mashups add value when two or more web apps have more meaning mixed together than the component parts did separately. If the mashup doesn't add considerable value, it's not worth doing. Unless you're doing it for fun.
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